Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10272645 Fuel 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
Pine wood was pyrolyzed in a fixed bed reactor at a heating rate of 10 °C and a final temperature of 700 °C, and the resultant volatiles were allowed to be secondarily cracked through a tubular reactor in a temperature range of 500-700 °C with and without packing a bed of char. The thermal effect and the catalytic effect of char on the cracking of tar were investigated. An attempt was made to deconvolute the intermingled contributions of the char-catalyzed tar cracking and the char gasification to the yields of gaseous and liquid products. It was found that the wood char (charcoal) was catalytically active for the tar cracking at 500-600 °C, while at 650-700 °C, the thermal effect became a dominant mode of the tar cracking. Above 600 °C, the autogenerated steam gasified the charcoal, resulting in a marked increase in the yield of gaseous product and a significant change in the gas composition. An anthracite char (A-char), a bituminous coal char (B-char), a lignite char (L-char) and graphite also behaved with catalytic activities towards the tar cracking at lower temperature, but only L-char showed reactivity for gasification at higher temperature.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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